This story is about story about the tragic consequences of post-traumatic stress disorder, but the narrator never comes out and says so. Erdrich describes post-traumatic stress symptoms as a narrator than a factual description. The theme of the story is there are bigger forces that can come between brotherly love and…..?. The Red Convertible is about Lyman, who narrates the story about his memories and relationship with his brother. They go on a road trip over the summer, next Henry is deployed to Vietnam. While Henry is away Lyman takes care of the car for when he comes back, however when he returned he wasn’t the same. Lyman tries to help his brother, but Henry doesn’t change. Next Lyman destroys the car, hoping that it will change Henry, and he would want to fix it, which he does. When Henry was done fixing it he and Lyman take it for a ride to the red river. Lyman thinks his brother is back to normal, but when they reach the river, Henry acts strangely and plunges into the river. Knowing that Henry is dead, Lyman pushes the convertible into the river so that it may share Henry’s fate.Post-traumatic stress disorder is an anxiety disorder that occurs after one sees or experiences a traumatic event that involves the threat of injury or death. PTSD can come from natural disasters or it can come from, assault, prison, rape, terrorism and war. There are three categories of PTSD; the first one is reliving the event, it disturbs day to day activity. There are flashback episodes, where the event seems to be happening again and again. There are repeated upsetting memories of the event. The person has repeated nightmares of the event. Finally there are strong, uncomfortable reactions to situations that remind you of the event. For the group re-experiencing the trauma, the story sort of shows Henry thinking about the war without the reader actually knowing. There are no flashbacks or nightmares mentioned in the story, but this quote...

YOU MAY ALSO FIND THESE DOCUMENTS HELPFUL

...Suicide
What is Suicide?
Not every self-inflicted death is a suicide. A man, who crashes his car into a tree after falling asleep on the wheel, is not trying to kill himself. Edwin Shneidman (1999, 1993, 1981, 1963), one of the most influential writers on this topic, defines suicide as an intentioned death—a self-inflicted death in which one makes an intentional, direct and conscious effort to end one’s life.
Intentional death may...

...in her suicide attempt two weeks ago.
Chelsee is a made up person however she is not alone in her struggles with depression and suicide attempts. She is an example of how common depression and suicide is in our society. This paper will explore the incidence of suicide in our society, risk factors, treatment options and understanding the difference between coping mechanisms, suicidal ideations and actual suicide behavior....

...interest, individuality, and expression. In a word, art is life.
Ernest Hemingway never fails to enlighten readers with his literary genius. Through his craft of short stories, Hemingway masters the use of literary elements using a combination of his imagination and real life experiences. He struggled with love, settling down, alcoholism, and his memories of war; converting his emotional instability to literary masterpieces. Hemingway is known for...

...﻿Characters’ Discourse and Narrator’s Discourse
The creation of first and secondary narratives which can be used to explain the doubling of the story in Hemingway‟s short stories is a function also of the act of narration (“narrating instance” in Genette) and of the presence of a narrator who produces them. In fact, it is exactly the presence of a narrator who produces a narrative text that makes our analysis of narrative discourse possible. Or Genette the “narrating situation...

...seems to be missing in the story is a crisis; however Hemingway injects implied crises in two points of this story. Between when the doctor says “He’s going to get well” and when Hemingway states “And it still isn’t you”, there is an implied crisis. There is no expression of his crisis thinking, only his thinking leading up to that point. This leaves the reader wondering what Hemingway is thinking at that point. At both crisis points...

...Hemingway defined the Code Hero as
"a man who lives correctly, following the ideals
of honor, courage and endurance in a world that
is sometimes chaotic, often stressful, and always painful."
This essay will develop different aspects of the Code Hero seen in many of Hemingway´s writings. “The Hemingway “code” consists of standards and forms of conduct by which a man can confront the realities of “nada” (of chance, accident, destruction and...

...Kerseboom
English 5V
January 4, 2013
Religious aspects of the novel A Farewell to Arms
A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway presents the nada and the nature of the universe. It also shows aspects of an anti-war novel. The protagonist of the book, Frederick Henry, betrays his love for nurse Catherine Barkley. This relationship represents Henry’s character as a typical Hemingway hero. He is an egoist and he is passive towards his wife Catherine. The...

...Novel
4/30/2013
The Life of Ernest Hemingway and The Sun is Also Rising
Ernest Hemingway was one of the most influential writers of the 19th century. Many have been influenced by his masculine, emotionless, grunt-like writing style, that to me, seem reflective of his life long depression. Hemingway was born with a condition called hemochromatosis, of which is said to be an overlooked condition he inherited from his father that later lead to...